RepA protein encoded by oat dwarf virus elicits a temperature-sensitive hypersensitive response-type cell death that involves jasmonic acid-dependent signaling

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Abstract

The hypersensitive response (HR) is a component of disease resistance that is often induced by pathogen infection, but essentially no information is available for members of the destructive mastreviruses. We have investigated an HR-type response elicited in Nicotiana species by Oat dwarf virus (ODV) and have found that expression of the ODV RepA protein but not other ODV-encoded proteins elicits the HR-type cell death associated with a burst of H2O2. Deletion mutagenesis indicates that the first nine amino acids (aa) at the N terminus of RepA and the two regions located between aa residues 173 and 195 and between aa residues 241 and 260 near the C terminus are essential for HR-type cell-death elicitation. Confocal and electron microscopy showed that the RepA protein is localized in the nuclei of plant cells and might contain bipartite nuclear localization signals. The HR-like lesions mediated by RepA were inhibited by temperatures above 30°C and involvement of jasmonic acid (JA) in HR was identified by gain- And loss-of-function experiments. To our knowledge, this is the first report of an elicitor of HR-type cell death from mastreviruses.

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Qian, Y., Hou, H., Shen, Q., Cai, X., Sunte, G., & Zhou, X. (2016). RepA protein encoded by oat dwarf virus elicits a temperature-sensitive hypersensitive response-type cell death that involves jasmonic acid-dependent signaling. Molecular Plant-Microbe Interactions, 29(1), 5–21. https://doi.org/10.1094/MPMI-07-15-0149-R

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